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><channel><title>Financing: Latest News &#8212; Arabian Post</title>
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<url>https://thearabianpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/cropped-arabianpost-logo-32x32.png</url><title>Financing: Latest News &#8212; Arabian Post</title><link>https://thearabianpost.com/financing/</link>
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<item><title>Bitcoin Foundation blames Mt Gox for trouble</title><link>https://thearabianpost.com/bitcoin-foundation-blames-mt-gox-for-trouble/</link>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[The Arabian Post Network]]></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Tue, 11 Feb 2014 11:34:24 +0000</pubDate>
<category><![CDATA[Financing]]></category>
<guid
isPermaLink="false">http://thearabianpost.com/?p=3703</guid><description><![CDATA[<a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/bitcoin-foundation-blames-mt-gox-for-trouble/" title="Bitcoin Foundation blames Mt Gox for trouble" rel="nofollow"></a><p>The Bitcoin Foundation said the Mt. Gox Bitcoin exchange in Tokyo is to blame for technical faults that prevented customer withdrawals of the virtual currency that lost as much as 21 percent of its value today. “The issues that Mt. Gox has been experiencing are due to an unfortunate interaction between Mt. Gox’s implementation of their highly customized wallet software, their customer support procedures and their unpreparedness,” [&#8230;]</p><p>The article <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/bitcoin-foundation-blames-mt-gox-for-trouble/">Bitcoin Foundation blames Mt Gox for trouble</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com">Arabian Post</a>.</p>
]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/bitcoin-foundation-blames-mt-gox-for-trouble/" title="Bitcoin Foundation blames Mt Gox for trouble" rel="nofollow"></a><p><a
href="http://thearabianpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/bitcoins.jpg"><img
fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3677" alt="Mock Bitcoins are displayed on a table in an illustration picture taken in Berlin" src="http://thearabianpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/bitcoins-300x199.jpg" width="300" height="199" /></a>The Bitcoin Foundation said the Mt. Gox Bitcoin exchange in Tokyo is to blame for technical faults that prevented customer withdrawals of the virtual currency that lost as much as 21 percent of its value today.</p><p>“The issues that Mt. Gox has been experiencing are due to an unfortunate interaction between Mt. Gox’s implementation of their highly customized wallet software, their customer support procedures and their unpreparedness,” said Gavin Andresen, chief scientist for the foundation, which promotes and sets technical standards for the currency.</p><p>Earlier today, Mt. Gox cited “a bug in the Bitcoin software” that is “not limited to Mt. Gox.” The quirk enables a user to cover up a transfer to another wallet &#8212; a software protocol for storing the virtual currency &#8212; and re-send the same money. The exchange said it was working with the core team of software developers associated with the Bitcoin Foundation to resolve the problem.</p><p>Andresen confirmed in an e-mail that Mt. Gox had been in touch with Bitcoin’s core developers, while adding that “they should be able to fix this on their own.” It is a problem internal to Mt. Gox, not the underlying Bitcoin concept, he said.</p><p>The Bitcoin Foundation is a network of entrepreneurs and technologists that oversees the basic software protocols for the digital currency. Mark Karpeles, the chief executive of Mt. Gox, is on the foundation’s board, along with Andresen.</p><p>The price of Bitcoin tumbled as much as 21 percent to $535.55 today before recovering to $664.75 at 4:23 p.m. New York time, according to the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index, which averages prices from exchanges. The index value was more than $780 before Mt. Gox announced the withdrawal halt on Feb. 7.</p><p>Mt. Gox had been part of the index until today, when CoinDesk announced it had removed the exchange from the calculations. The decision by Mt. Gox to shut down Bitcoin withdrawals for at least four days &#8212; they are still suspended &#8211; &#8211; prompted the review, according to a statement on the CoinDesk website.</p><p>“These recent withdrawal restrictions are just the latest in a series of issues which have made Mt. Gox’s inclusion in the BPI problematic,” CoinDesk wrote.</p><p>Another problem was the persistent premium, measured in dollars, paid by Mt. Gox customers over other exchanges, CoinDesk said.</p><p>The ability to re-send Bitcoins means that Mt. Gox may have been defrauded by its own users, said Andreas Antonopoulos, chief security officer of Blockchain.info, which provides online wallets for a digital currencies.</p><p>“I think it’s unlikely they are insolvent,” Antonopoulos said. “It’s likely they’ve been taken for a ride by some of their clients who’ve made double, triple and quadruple withdrawals.”</p><p>Antonopoulos said the company probably stored most Bitcoins offline to prevent theft.</p><p>Nejc Kodric, the chief executive of London-based Bitstamp, another exchange, said in an e-mail Bitstamp has been unaffected by the problem Mt. Gox is reporting.</p><p>Mt. Gox said customers can take out cash “as normal” and it’s working to resolve technical issues that prompted it to halt withdrawals of the digital currency.</p><p>“It’s not about cash at all, only about Bitcoin,” Michael Keferl, a communications officer for Tokyo-based Mt. Gox, said in an interview today. “There is a problem in the way transactions are verified.”</p><p>Mt. Gox customers have also complained that it can be difficult to get cash out of the exchange. U.S. authorities seized a total of $5 million from the company’s accounts.</p><p>The company released a statement today explaining the technical issues and saying it will resume Bitcoin withdrawals once they are addressed.</p><p>“We’re sending cash to people in Japan and around the world as normal. They can exchange coins into cash,” Keferl said in Tokyo. The Bitcoin withdrawal issue “will be fixed. It’s not like a structural problem.”</p><p>Bitcoin was introduced in 2008 by a programmer or group of programmers under the name Satoshi Nakamoto and has since gained traction with merchants around the world. The digital money has no central issuing authority, and uses a public ledger to verify transactions while preserving users’ anonymity.-Bloomberg</p><p>The article <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/bitcoin-foundation-blames-mt-gox-for-trouble/">Bitcoin Foundation blames Mt Gox for trouble</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com">Arabian Post</a>.</p>
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</item>
<item><title>JPMorgan Lost $6 Billion? Buy! Buy! Buy!</title><link>https://thearabianpost.com/jpmorgan-lost-6-billion-buy-buy-buy/</link>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[The Arabian Post Network]]></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Sun, 22 Jul 2012 11:59:56 +0000</pubDate>
<category><![CDATA[Financing]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[JPMorgan]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[JPMorgan Chase]]></category>
<guid
isPermaLink="false">http://magazine3.com/demo/thebusinessnews/?p=128</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>Another week, another warning from megabanker JPMorgan (JPM). Two months ago, as you probably recall, JP spooked stock market investors with news that it had managed to rack up $2 billion worth of losses, trading derivatives on European debt. Market capitalization was lost. CEOs were subpoenaed. Mea culpas were released &#8230; and life went on. Then last week we learned that the news from May was much [&#8230;]</p><p>The article <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/jpmorgan-lost-6-billion-buy-buy-buy/">JPMorgan Lost $6 Billion? Buy! Buy! Buy!</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com">Arabian Post</a>.</p>
]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img
decoding="async" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-131" title="JPMorgan chase" src="http://magazine3.com/demo/thebusinessnews/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/JPMorgan-chase.jpg" alt="" width="615" height="365" /></p><p>Another week, another warning from megabanker JPMorgan (JPM).</p><p>Two months ago, as you probably recall, JP spooked stock market investors with news that it had managed to rack up $2 billion worth of losses, trading derivatives on European debt.</p><p>Market capitalization was lost. CEOs were subpoenaed. Mea culpas were released &#8230; and life went on.</p><p>Then last week we learned that the news from May was much worse than initially feared. On Friday, JPMorgan announced grim second-quarter earnings:</p><ul><li>Profits came in at $1.21 per share &#8212; better than expected, but worse than the $1.27 than JP earned last year.</li><li>Revenues were also down &#8212; a whopping 17% year over year.</li><li>And as far as the trading fiasco goes, instead of losing $2 billion, JP confessed it had actually suffered something closer to a $6 billion loss ($5.8 billion, to be exact).</li></ul><p>So how did investors take the news? With a sigh of relief and a wipe of the brow.</p><p>Turns out, investors never really thought JP&#8217;s losses would stop at $2 billion, and had been bracing themselves for a much bigger hit when earnings came out. When the news turned out less dire than feared, they rushed to bid up JP shares by 6%.</p><p>But really, they needn&#8217;t have worried in the first place.</p><p>Why not? It&#8217;s simple math: Over the past 12 months, JPMorgan Chase earned $16.5 billion. Analysts predict it will earn more than $17 billion by the time this year is over, and then earn $21.5 billion more next year! With profits this robust, the occasional $5.8 billion trading loss is &#8230; well, more than a flesh wound, but certainly survivable. And if the analysts are right, next year&#8217;s profit will cover this year&#8217;s trading loss nearly four times over, making the London Whale&#8217;s losses fade quickly into history.</p><p>The article <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/jpmorgan-lost-6-billion-buy-buy-buy/">JPMorgan Lost $6 Billion? Buy! Buy! Buy!</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com">Arabian Post</a>.</p>
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</item>
<item><title>K9 Ventures Raises $40 Million Second Micro-VC Fund</title><link>https://thearabianpost.com/k9-ventures-raises-40-million-second-micro-vc-fund/</link>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[The Arabian Post Network]]></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Sun, 22 Jul 2012 10:18:59 +0000</pubDate>
<category><![CDATA[Financing]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Headlines]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[BackType]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Card.io]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[CardMunch]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[IndexTank]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[K9 Ventures]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[LinkedIn]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Manu Kumar]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[PayPal]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Twitter]]></category>
<guid
isPermaLink="false">http://magazine3.com/demo/thebusinessnews/?p=141</guid><description><![CDATA[<a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/k9-ventures-raises-40-million-second-micro-vc-fund/" title="K9 Ventures Raises $40 Million Second Micro-VC Fund" rel="nofollow"></a><p>K9 Ventures, a micro-venture capital firm founded by entrepreneur Manu Kumar, has raised $40 million for its second fund. The new fund is much larger than the firm’s first fund of $6.25 million raised in 2009. The firm will continue investing in about four to six companies per year. But the larger fund will invest in 250,000 to $750,000 instead of its current investments of $100,000 to [&#8230;]</p><p>The article <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/k9-ventures-raises-40-million-second-micro-vc-fund/">K9 Ventures Raises $40 Million Second Micro-VC Fund</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com">Arabian Post</a>.</p>
]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/k9-ventures-raises-40-million-second-micro-vc-fund/" title="K9 Ventures Raises $40 Million Second Micro-VC Fund" rel="nofollow"></a><p><img
decoding="async" class="alignright size-full wp-image-142" title="Manu-kumar-k9" src="http://magazine3.com/demo/thebusinessnews/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Manu-kumar-k9.jpg" alt="" width="374" height="222" />K9 Ventures, a micro-venture capital firm founded by entrepreneur Manu Kumar, has raised $40 million for its second fund.</p><p>The new fund is much larger than the firm’s first fund of $6.25 million raised in 2009. The firm will continue investing in about four to six companies per year. But the larger fund will invest in 250,000 to $750,000 instead of its current investments of $100,000 to $250,000. K9 can therefore lead investment deals with the larger investments.</p><p>So-called “super angels” or “micro-VCs” have proliferated over the last few years filling a gap as venture capitalists raised larger and larger funds. These firms also provided seed stage funding as a new breed of technology start-ups needed less capital do develop their first products than in the past. As a result many entrepreneurs have flocked to these seed investors.</p><p>Recent K9 portfolio exits include CardMunch and IndexTank, which were acquired by LinkedIn, BackType, which was acquired by Twitter, and Card.io, which was acquired by PayPal.</p><p>K9 Ventures has carved out its own unique space in the market with a very focused approach to investing that emphasizes new technology, often that has taken years to research or develop. Kumar who received a Ph.D. at Stanford appreciates deep technology in a company. Other emphases include companies with technical founders, who have the ability to develop their own product, a company with either new technology or a new market. Kumar also believes in companies that have a clear revenue model in which a customer buys something from a company. Companies with ad-based business models make Kumar’s eyes glaze over, he says.</p><p>The article <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com/k9-ventures-raises-40-million-second-micro-vc-fund/">K9 Ventures Raises $40 Million Second Micro-VC Fund</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://thearabianpost.com">Arabian Post</a>.</p>
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